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A surveillance system and drug forensic network to monitor the quality and authenticity of artemisinin combination treatments in Africa |
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Multiple, across select countries in Africa |
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Dr. Harparkash Kaur, LSHTM |
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Joint-PI's Facundo M. Fernandez, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, USA. (Drug Forensics) Paul Newton, Centre for Clinical, Tropical Medicine, Churchill Hospital, Oxford University, Oxford UK and LSHTM, UK. Michael D. Green, Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, USA |
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The quality of antimalarial medicines is of major concern globally as poor quality drugs undermine effective treatment and probably engender drug resistance. WHO estimates that there are up to three million deaths from malaria annually. Although the prevalence of poor quality antimalarials in Africa is yet to be determined, a large percentage of these deaths might be avoided if the medicines were effective, of good quality and used properly. Artemisinin derivatives (artesunate, artemether and dihydroartemisinin) in combination with partner medicines (ACTs) are the most effective antimalarial drugs available providing rapid cure. Successful drugs such as ACTs are at risk of being counterfeited or produced with insufficient quality control resulting in substandard products. There is widespread distribution of fake artesunate tablets in SE Asia, resulting in fatalities amongst people who would have otherwise survived their malaria infection. Fake antimalarials containing sub-therapeutic amounts of artemisinin derivatives may engender resistance, and there are preliminary reports indicating the emergence of artemisinin derivative resistant strains (Noedl et al. 2008). Counterfeit artemisinin derivatives and ACTs have already been described from 6 sub-Saharan African countries, but no large scale objective efforts have been undertaken to assess their prevalence. The aim of this study is to assess the quality of artemisinin derivatives and ACTs in Africa via:
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To date we have analysed all samples from Rwanda and Cambodia, and at present are carrying out the laboratory analysis of samples collected during the first set of ACTc IMPACT 2 project outlet surveys in Tanzania. The results will be collated and analysed to classify these drugs as substandard, degraded or counterfeit. |